Leigh Gilmore is professor emerita of English at the Ohio State University. She is the author of Tainted Witness: Why We Doubt What Women Say About Their Lives (Columbia, 2017), The Limits of Autobiography: Trauma and Testimony (second edition, 2023), and Autobiographics: A Feminist Theory of Women’s Self-Representation (1994), as well as coauthor of Witnessing Girlhood: Toward an Intersectional Tradition of Life Writing (2019). She contributes regularly to WBUR’s Cognoscenti.
Leigh Gilmore writes with compelling authority about the sizable contribution that narrative expression makes to our understanding of justice. The #MeToo Effect demonstrates how victims and survivors have exposed the bias in traditional fact-finding processes, emphasizing that diverse trauma sufferers' public storytelling is a longstanding tradition that pushes society closer to the truth. -- Anita Hill, author of <i>Believing: Our Thirty-Year Journey to End Gender Violence</i> Paying careful attention to gendered, racial, class, and sexual power hierarchies, Gilmore offers a compelling and deeply considered analysis-grounded in literary history and criticism, from Harriet Jacobs to Sophocles-of narrative activism, storytelling in service of social change, tracing its explosive trajectory before, during, and since the 2017 #MeToo peak. This is such a smart book that complicates and enriches an understanding of recent feminist movements and the literary and activist lineage on which they are built. -- Rebecca Traister, author of <i>Good and Mad: The Revolutionary Power of Women's Anger</i> The #MeToo Effect is a powerful, persuasive, and truly comprehensive story about the moment when millions of victims of sexual assault came together and used their narrative power to change the world. Leigh Gilmore reminds us of the power of survivor storytelling and how, in too many cases, it becomes a form of justice itself. This is an essential read for anyone interested in understanding how the #MeToo movement was born, its successes, and how it continues to shape our conversations and culture today. -- Salamishah Tillet, activist, scholar, and winner of the 2022 Pulitzer Prize in Criticism In this book, which is at once painful, powerful, and profound, Leigh Gilmore offers a vision of #MeToo as a form of narrative activism that allows survivors of sexual violence to find new ways of sharing as well as bearing witness. In a system designed to create doubt about the truth of survivor testimony, Gilmore asks us to be alert to the ethical and political promise of #MeToo, how it builds on a long lineage of feminist activism and creates alternative pathways for justice. A necessary and vital book. -- Sara Ahmed, author of <i>Complaint!</i> Gilmore draws on her peerless knowledge of women's life writing and feminist theory to provide a stunningly original account that situates #MeToo in a long history of feminist narrative activism. This is a searing and ultimately hopeful analysis of how survivor testimony can change the world. -- Sharon Marcus, Columbia University, author of <i>The Drama of Celebrity</i> Do 'ladies lie'? 'Survivor reading' and 'narrative activism' are Leigh Gilmore's powerful replies to the age-old charge. She argues for a #MeToo effect that has furthered the healing and justice that courts have all too often failed to give. A readable, rigorous, and compelling book. -- Bonnie Honig, author of <i>A Feminist Theory of Refusal</i>